English Listening: Shopping for a New Dress | Episode 15

Listen to a story about all the problems I had trying to buy a dress to wear to my friends’ wedding!

You’ll also learn how to to pronounce “hadn’t,” “didn’t,” and “couldn’t.”

Welcome to the English Teacher Melanie Podcast, a podcast for intermediate to advanced English learners who want to improve their English listening and speaking skills!

Each episode includes a story and a pronunciation tip. In the story, I use core vocabulary, the most common words in English, to tell a real world story. The pronunciation tip will help you understand natural spoken English.

You’ll hear the story twice. The first time, the story is a little slower than normal. It sounds funny because I used editing software to change the speed of the story and make it slower. After the pronunciation tip, you’ll hear the story again, but at a regular speed.

THE STORY

Earlier this year I was invited to a wedding in New Zealand! Two of my close friends were getting married! I’d never been to New Zealand and I hadn’t been to a wedding in a long time, so this was a great excuse to buy a new dress!

I didn’t want to waste time dress shopping in New Zealand. I wanted to spend as much time as possible sightseeing, doing things with friends and resting before the wedding. I wanted to buy a dress before I left Canada. Since there are almost 200 stores in the nearby mall, I thought for sure I could find a nice dress there!

I spent an entire afternoon at the mall trying on dress after dress, but I came away very disappointed. I couldn’t find anything that fit my figure. Every dress I tried on had no shape to it. The chest, waist, and hips were all the same size and the dress just hung like a sack on my body. I know I’m not skinny, but I’m not fat, either. I’m somewhere in the middle, like most women. I couldn’t find any dresses made for a normal-size woman with curves. This was very disappointing.

On my way to New Zealand, I spent a week in Hawaii. I knew I would have better luck dress shopping there. There are a lot of places to shop in Hawaii since it’s a popular tourist destination! I was not let down! My hotel was near the largest mall in Hawaii. The very first store I went into had amazing dresses that fit me perfectly. The sales girl was so persuasive, I walked out of the store with TWO new dresses! I decided to wear one dress to the bachelorette party and the other dress to the wedding.

PRONUNCIATION TIP

Listen to some sentences from the story:

“I hadn’t been to a wedding in a long time.” “I didn’t want to waste time dress shopping in New Zealand.” “I couldn’t find anything that fit my figure.”

Did you hear the negative contractions hadn’t, didn’t, or couldn’t in those sentences? In natural, fast speech, these negative contractions are not fully pronounced.

Contractions are a basic part of natural spoken English. Instead of saying had and not separately, they are joined together, and some letters are left out of the final contraction, hadn’t.

Something interesting happens with these specific negative contractions. Had, did, and could all end with a d consonant sound. When they are contracted with not, not is reduced to the letters n and t. The d, n, and t consonant sounds all have the same tongue position, so in natural spoken English, they are not fully pronounced.

To begin the d consonant sound, the tongue goes up, and the front of tongue is pressed up against the top of the mouth. This is also the tongue position for the n consonant sound. This is also the starting position for the t consonant sound.

For example, to say the word hadn’t, move your tongue up to start the d sound, but don’t finish it. Keep your tongue pressed up against the top of your mouth: had.

Next, make the n consonant sound had n. The n consonant sound comes through your nose. The n sound is very short.

The t consonant sound at the end of the word is a held t. It stops the n sound, and it’s not fully pronounced. Don’t drop your tongue at the end of the word: had nt

Listen again to the negative contractions:

hadn’t
didn’t
couldn’t

This also occurs with other negative contractions I didn’t use in the story:

wouldn’t
shouldn’t

It may take a while before you can hear the difference between the modal verb, and the negative contraction.

Hello, I hope you are doing well. If you don’t mind I have something to suggest, the thing is that if you could please attache the lessons as a PDF format. It would be a great idea.
If you need help on the project, I can land a hand.
Kind regards.

Thank you for the suggestion! I will not be making this lesson available as a .pdf. In return for a FREE listening lesson, all I ask is that people come to my website to read the transcript or subscribe to the podcast on iTunes. If you are listening to the .mp3 file on your phone, or iPad, you are able to read the transcript of the story as part of the file.

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About Melanie

I help English learners move from the classroom into the real world by teaching you real world sentences and helping you understand natural spoken English. I also help you find the best study tips and training techniques that work for you!

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